Archivi tag: botanical perfumery

Materia Viva, the Aromatic Ezine – Camellia japonica, the Japanese Camellia

Materia Viva is a work in progress dedicated to aromatic raw materials: resins, plants, woods, essences, balsams, flowers, seeds, roots.

It arises where scent, word, image, and research meet. Of each material, what matters is not only its effect, but everything that accompanies it: where it comes from, which landscape generates it, which hands have gathered it, how it has become a symbol.

It is at once a cultural notebook and a sensory experience. Each material is traced back to its origin, through lands and customs, ancient trade routes, archives, faces, and sudden intuitions. Starting from a resin, a wood, a flower, the thread is followed: clues are gathered, the scent is listened to, an image is pursued, until a form surfaces.

Part of this work lives in texts and digital publications; another part becomes original artwork, printed in fine art.

The latest issue is dedicated to Camellia japonica. Here is an excerpt:

I close my eyes. My fingertips move across the skin of my face — tapping lightly, tracing small circles. I use an oil that flows easily, weightless to the touch. I bring my fingers to my nose, and this time the scent is the faintest thing: no floral fragrance, but rather a delicacy that speaks directly to the skin — making it immediately supple, glad. This is how I first meet Camellia japonica, a plant with full, red flowers that seems at first to promise perfume, and instead delivers care through the oil pressed from its seeds.

You can receive a free PDF copy by writing to us via the WhatsApp button on the site.

Sichuan Pepper – The New Issue of Materia Viva, the Aromatic Ezine

Materia Viva is a continuing work dedicated to aromatic raw materials: resins, plants, woods, essences, balsams, flowers, seeds, roots.

It comes to life from the interweaving of scent, word, image, and living inquiry. Each material is explored not only for what it does, but for what it carries with it: its history, the place it comes from, the landscape that generates it, the gesture that makes it symbolic, the way it inhabits the world.

It is a notebook — both cultural and sensory, an aromatic e-zine: it traces each material back to its source, crossing lands, customs, trade routes, archives, figures, and sudden intuitions.

A resin, a wood, a flower, an essence become the heart of a research: a path is traced, clues are gathered, the scent is listened to, images are pursued, a form is allowed to surface.

Part of this work settles into texts and digital publications. Part becomes original artwork with fine art printing.

The latest issue is dedicated to Green Sichuan Pepper (Zanthoxylum armatum). Here is an excerpt:

I smell the green Sichuan pepper and something happens that is not yet scent. There is a snappy citrus note, a freshness that speaks of lime and broken leaf, but underneath another promise is already running: that of a vibration. Because this is a material that above all makes things vibrate, and it does so in a way that almost makes you want to laugh — a light, fizzing, surprised tingling.

If you would like to read Materia Viva, contact us via the WhatsApp button on the site to request a free copy.